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Work, Rewired

How to safeguard hybrid working

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As lock­downs ease, organ­i­sa­tions are look­ing to a post-Covid future. For many, the future of work will com­bine remote and office work­ing. But what are the chal­lenges of hybrid work­ing mod­els?


IN COLLABORATION WITH SALESFORCE

Karam Fil­fi­lan
03 Aug 2021

For a large por­tion of our work­force, the key ques­tion dur­ing the pan­dem­ic has been sim­ple: can I work from home, or am I stuck at my work­place? Lock­downs, iso­la­tion and quar­an­tines have forced mil­lions of peo­ple to take part in a remote work­ing exper­i­ment that has rev­o­lu­tionised how, where and when we work. 

But as we move into the post-vac­ci­na­tion, lock­down-eas­ing part of the pan­dem­ic, organ­i­sa­tions are begin­ning to think about what the future of work looks like. Some, such as Twit­ter and Deloitte, have opt­ed to offer employ­ees the oppor­tu­ni­ty to con­tin­ue work­ing ful­ly remote­ly if they choose. 

How­ev­er, for most organ­i­sa­tions the future of work will be hybrid, with some time spent in an office and some work­ing remote­ly. A recent BBC poll sug­gest­ed 43 or the UK’s biggest 50 com­pa­nies, cov­er­ing more than 1 mil­lion employ­ees, are tak­ing this route. 

It’s been wide­ly doc­u­ment­ed that greater flex­i­bil­i­ty leads to more pro­duc­tiv­i­ty and bal­ance. Recent Sales­force research found employ­ees are 16% more like­ly to agree they are more pro­duc­tive at home, with 13% more like­ly to agree their teams are more pro­duc­tive. For many, home work­ing offers improved bal­ance, with 20% of employ­ees at home being more like­ly to inte­grate well­be­ing breaks into their day than employ­ees in the office.

The problem with hybrid working

At its best, hybrid work­ing pro­vides employ­ees with extra flex­i­bil­i­ty to design their own work­ing pat­terns, increas­ing pro­duc­tiv­i­ty and engage­ment. How­ev­er, there is also a down­side to hybrid work­ing that lead­ers must con­sid­er. 

“The biggest con­cern with hybrid work­ing is that employ­ees’ needs can get side­lined. Flex­i­ble work is not just about work­ing pref­er­ences, it is about recog­nis­ing that peo­ple don’t have com­pa­ra­ble cir­cum­stances and enabling them to work dif­fer­ent­ly in recog­ni­tion of this,” says Dr Jane Par­ry, lec­tur­er and direc­tor of research for HRM and organ­i­sa­tion­al behav­iour at Southamp­ton Busi­ness School. 

Par­ry leads the cross-insti­tu­tion­al Work After Lock­down project, which exam­ines how pan­dem­ic-dri­ven remote work­ing will change the way we work. Its research has focused on roles in local author­i­ties and law firms, posi­tions that were pre­vi­ous­ly large­ly office-based. 

The project has found that improv­ing diver­si­ty man­age­ment has been essen­tial for organ­i­sa­tion­al well­be­ing. This means the key to sur­viv­ing – and thriv­ing – in remote work­ing is under­stand­ing that dif­fer­ent employ­ees have dif­fer­ent require­ments and build­ing indi­vid­ual flex­i­bil­i­ty into work­ing arrange­ments. Con­tin­u­ing to fac­tor these indi­vid­ual needs into hybrid work­ing mod­els is vital to mak­ing them work.

Sec­ond­ly, Par­ry believes that hybrid work­ing mod­els need to take into account poten­tial inequities that could come to the fore, from both remote and phys­i­cal office per­spec­tives. These include height­ened dis­crim­i­na­tion against those with phys­i­cal dis­abil­i­ties in office set­tings, and ongo­ing dig­i­tal exclu­sion for employ­ees who strug­gle with dig­i­tal skills when work­ing remote­ly.

“There is emerg­ing evi­dence that remote work­ing is enabling some peo­ple who have strug­gled with expec­ta­tions around office pres­ence to con­tin­ue work­ing in more sus­tain­able ways,” Par­ry says, point­ing to video tele­con­fer­enc­ing ser­vices like Zoom, which have had an equal­is­ing effect around inclu­sion.

“Organ­i­sa­tions will have to devel­op robust strate­gies to ensure these gains aren’t lost if meet­ings become more hybrid,” Par­ry says. “We heard a lot from man­agers in our research about con­cerns that office-based employ­ees could ben­e­fit from creep­ing expec­ta­tions around pre­sen­teeism.” 

Driving a new culture

Anoth­er hybrid work­ing con­cern for lead­ers is a poten­tial loss of organ­i­sa­tion­al cul­ture. A Gallup sur­vey in the US found that employ­ees who do not work in the same loca­tion as their man­ag­er are 10 per­cent­age points less like­ly to say some­one cares about them at work and 10 per­cent­age points less like­ly to feel recog­nised for their efforts. 

With some employ­ees remote and some in the office, how can work­ers build con­nec­tions and devel­op trust when they’re rarely face-to-face?

“How much organ­i­sa­tion­al cul­ture depends on being co-locat­ed real­ly comes down to what peo­ple actu­al­ly do,” says Clare Kel­li­her, pro­fes­sor of work and organ­i­sa­tion at Cran­field School of Man­age­ment. “Often, I vis­it work­places with big cen­tral desks and every­one is work­ing away with their head­phones on.”

Kel­li­her notes that many peo­ple who worked in offices spent much of their time vis­it­ing clients or tak­ing part in small­er meet­ings. “ Also, let’s not for­get that peo­ple who went to offices spent much of their time out see­ing clients or in small­er meet­ings. We need to get away from this idea that we were all togeth­er in one envi­ron­ment, when we weren’t,” she says.

While she agrees that it is eas­i­er for col­leagues to build rela­tion­ships and cul­ture when in the same phys­i­cal space, Kel­li­her believes this can still be achieved with hybrid work­ing. Instead, think about the things your organ­i­sa­tion did to rein­force cul­ture. If they were around awards or cel­e­bra­to­ry events, plan these for when peo­ple are in the office. If it was more around val­ues and beliefs, ensure they are main­tained, whether face-to-face or remote­ly. 

Keep experimenting

Suc­cess­ful hybrid work­ing mod­els must con­sid­er more than just where you work. It’s also about when you work. 

His­tor­i­cal­ly, remote work­ers have been more flex­i­ble with time, says Kel­li­her. This has been true dur­ing the pan­dem­ic in areas like child­care and home­school­ing. But organ­i­sa­tions mov­ing to hybrid work­ing need to think about work­ing time, she says. Will they expect 9–5 hours, or are they hap­py to be more flex­i­ble? 

“I think the answer depends on the job role, but organ­i­sa­tions need to set clear expec­ta­tions to avoid com­mu­ni­ca­tion break­downs,” says Kel­li­her. 

Ulti­mate­ly — like enforced remote work­ing dur­ing the pan­dem­ic — hybrid work­ing is going to be an exper­i­ment. It’s impor­tant that organ­i­sa­tions build in flex­i­bil­i­ty, con­sul­ta­tions and iter­a­tions as they progress, rather than enforc­ing a strict pol­i­cy. It’s about indi­vid­ual needs, rather than blan­ket poli­cies. 

“Remem­ber, we haven’t done this before. Man­agers need to exper­i­ment and reap­praise what works and what doesn’t, and indi­vid­ual employ­ees need to reap­praise what they want and don’t want. It’s going to take many months to play around with hybrid work­ing before we get it right,” says Kel­li­her. 

Why there’s more to a happy workforce than flexibility

It’s impor­tant to remem­ber that work­ing from home isn’t a sil­ver bul­let for employ­ee engage­ment. While Covid-19 lock­downs have allowed some employ­ees to expe­ri­ence work­ing life beyond the office, that hasn’t been the case for a vast num­ber of work­ers who have con­tin­ued to com­mute to fac­to­ries, offices and work­places. 

Con­se­quent­ly, lead­ers need to ask them­selves what it is that makes some employ­ees want to work from home. Is it tru­ly flex­i­bil­i­ty and the end of the com­mute, or is there some­thing deep­er about their role, office envi­ron­ment or even cul­ture that keeps peo­ple away?

If so, it’s time to address it. The pan­dem­ic has pro­vid­ed employ­ees with plen­ty of time to think about how they view their careers and jobs. Bring­ing peo­ple back into the office and expect­ing them to pick up where they left off pre-pan­dem­ic is a recipe for dis­as­ter. 

Instead, focus on a col­lab­o­ra­tive approach, ask­ing employ­ees what ele­ments of flex­i­bil­i­ty they require and how they want the return to office to look. Go slow, with par­tial office rein­te­gra­tion and extra flex­i­bil­i­ty at the begin­ning. Most impor­tant­ly, keep up the well­be­ing and engage­ment pro­grammes that ran dur­ing the pan­dem­ic, expand­ing them to include sup­port on return­ing to the office. 

It’s going to be a long road until employ­ees feel emo­tion­al­ly and psy­cho­log­i­cal­ly pre­pared for post-pan­dem­ic work. So remem­ber, there’s much more to a hap­py work­force than just flex­i­ble work­ing. 

To find out how Sales­force is pow­er­ing the work­force of tomor­row, vis­it salesforce.com/uk/work.


As lockdowns ease, organisations are looking to a post-Covid future. For many, the future of work will combine remote and office working. But what are the challenges of hybrid working models?

For a large portion of our workforce, the key question during the pandemic has been simple: can I work from home, or am I stuck at my workplace? Lockdowns, isolation and quarantines have forced millions of people to take part in a remote working experiment that has revolutionised how, where and when we work. 

But as we move into the post-vaccination, lockdown-easing part of the pandemic, organisations are beginning to think about what the future of work looks like. Some, such as Twitter and Deloitte, have opted to offer employees the opportunity to continue working fully remotely if they choose. 

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